
Sasabe, Arizona - Wikipedia
Sasabe (O'odham: Ṣaṣawk) is a small hamlet in the Altar Valley of southern Pima County, Arizona, United States, immediately north of the international border with Mexico.
Sasabe, AZ: All You Must Know Before You Go (2026) - Tripadvisor
Sasabe Tourism: Tripadvisor has 81 reviews of Sasabe Hotels, Attractions, and Restaurants making it your best Sasabe resource.
'Where the Heck is Sasabe, AZ?' - Cooperative.com
Unlike border towns like Tijuana, visitors don’t flock to Sasabe, Mexico. There’s a bar and a small store, but no gas station, so it’s easy to see why residents cross into Arizona for necessities.
Mexican border town scarred 10 months after surge of gang …
Aug 19, 2024 · Ten months ago violence erupted between warring criminal groups in the sleepy dusty border town of Sasabe, Sonora, displacing more than 2,000 people who remain …
Arizona’s Smallest Small Town. Fewer people live in Sasabe
Dec 6, 2023 · Arizona’s Smallest Small Town Fewer people live in Sasabe, Ariz., than you’ll find in line at a typical Phoenix Starbucks. And that’s just how this tough old border town likes it.
Sasabe, AZ Map & Directions - MapQuest
Get directions, maps, and traffic for Sasabe, AZ. Check flight prices and hotel availability for your visit.
Bordering on History – Sasabe, Arizona - CapeNews.net
Jan 30, 2024 · Sasabe sits at the Mexican Sonora state border; its Mexican counterpart—Sasabe, Sonora, is two miles south of the US Customs House. Of the five, this port of entry is the least …
One store, three residents: What life looks like in Sasabe, Arizona
Oct 13, 2025 · SASABE, Ariz. (KGUN) — Have you ever been to Sasabe, Arizona? Well, it's quite the small town.
Historic Highway 286 reaches ranches, tiny border town of Sasabe
Feb 28, 2018 · State Route 286 runs out of Arizona real estate on the edge of Sasabe, a tiny outpost on the border with a general store, post office and end-of-the-road tranquility. To the …
Altar Valley Corridor Part 2: Sasabe, Phantom Border Town
Dec 15, 2017 · What we now know of as Sasabe, Arizona, has its roots in 1912 when Carlos Escalante and Fernando Serrano, along with their families, fled the violence of the Mexican …